The attack showed the dangers of Russian and American forces’ operating in proximity. President Vladimir V. Putin called it a “significant blow” to the relationship.
It was hard to reconcile the anguished president with the snarky critic who advised his predecessor not to strike.
President Trump retaliated against the Assad government for a chemical attack in Syria that killed more than 80 civilians. The question for the Pentagon is whether its action will ensure that poisonous gas will no longer be among the many scourges that plague Syria.
President Trump’s decision to launch cruise missiles at an air base in Syria scrambled reactions across the political spectrum.
The president ordered the strike without authorization by the United Nations Security Council or by Congress, raising questions about his legal limits.
Some Syrians who fled their homeland for America found themselves in a puzzling spot: appreciating a president whose travel ban they have denounced.
Since 2011, Donald J. Trump openly expressed his opposition to intervention in Syria. As president, it may have all changed for him with one missile strike.
The steps leading to President Trump’s order to strike a Syrian airfield in response to a chemical weapons attack on civilians.
He becomes the 113th justice of the Supreme Court, capping a political brawl that lasted for more than a year and tested constitutional norms inside the Capitol’s fraying upper chamber.
For Judge Neil M. Gorsuch to win Senate confirmation as an associate justice, he had to learn how to say nothing much at all. Here’s what you need to know at the end of the day.
Friday: Worries over harvesting in wine country, a $52 billion deal on road repairs, and a look back at auto racing’s heyday in Southern California.
The attack struck the heart of a nation known for its peacefulness and tolerance, and turned a warm spring afternoon into a scene of terror.
Three people were killed in Stockholm on Friday when a man steered a truck into a crowd of people. Prime Minister Stefan Lofven called it a terrorist attack. General merchandise stores shed 34,700 jobs in March, a new sign of the challenges facing brick-and-mortar merchants with the rise of online commerce.
The showing was the weakest in nearly a year and followed two robust increases. But unemployment fell to 4.5 percent, the lowest in almost a decade.
Mr. Trump is considering a shift in roles for his chief strategist, Stephen Bannon, who has become isolated as other White House power centers have grown.
President Trump warned that if China did not curb North Korea’s rogue actions, the United States would step in.
The Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus is closing for good. Peek backstage, fly on the trapeze, and meet the show’s ringmaster of 18 years as he reflects on what he’ll miss most — all in 360° video. It has been on the road since 1871. But the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus will shut down after its last show May 21.
On Friday, Gov. Jerry Brown ended the drought emergency for the vast majority of the state, a move that marked the formal end to a water shortage.
Prosecutors said Mr. Walters made more than $40 million from 2008 to 2014 by realizing profits and avoiding losses based on inside information he received about Dean Foods.
The Fox commentator’s new book, written with Bruce Feirstein, deploys “snowflake” as an insult for anything from spinelessness to political correctness.
Bill O’Reilly’s new book, “Old School,’ is billed as a defense of traditional values, and initial sales are strong despite a week of coverage of abuse claims against him.
I visited a dead-quiet room at the Guggenheim as part of “PSAD Synthetic Desert III,” an installation by Doug Wheeler.
The $153 billion includes tuition-free education at state colleges, along with changes to workers’ compensation and the juvenile justice system.
As cars remain a point of conflict, Detroit pushes to sell pickups in a market long skeptical of them, in an effort to tap a Chinese taste for American brands.
Mark E. Green, a Tennessee state senator and former Army flight surgeon, has a record of opposing rights for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people.
Robert Bentley faces a litany of problems: an state investigation, impeachment proceedings, and, now, the possibility of a criminal prosecution.
Alex Gansa, the showrunner, talks about writing episodes during the Trump presidency: Plots were rejiggered, and characters were changed.
Ms. Lahren, a star in conservative media, is still being paid by The Blaze, a TV station Mr. Beck started, but she said the company has sought to silence her.
As hazing-related injuries and deaths periodically make headlines, “Burning Sands” and “The Quad” are shining a light on the effects of the practice.
Critics say mandating such a credential makes child care even less affordable and reduces the supply and diversity of people able to do the job.
More Recent Articles |
Post a Comment